Ignorance and the Unknowable in Early Modernity Society for Renaissance Studies Crowdcast book-launch
Event details
Sandrine Parageau and Kevin Killeen in conversation with Katie Murphy and Line Cottegnies, hosted by Namratha Rao.
Two Recent books from Stanford University Press deal with overlapping and counter-intuitive facets of early modern culture, what might be called Negative Epistemology, how the gaps in what we know and the limits of what we could possibly know might be seen as generative, allowing access to facets of the world that were otherwise opaque. Sandrine Parageau (Sorbonne) explores the role of Ignorance, imagined variously as a mode of wisdom, a principle of knowledge and an epistemological instrument in figures such as Montaigne, Bacon, Descartes and Locke. Kevin Killeen (York) looks at the role of the Unknowable in early modern thought, and how the elusive traditions of apophatic and mystical thinking, with their rich poetics, were re-tooled in the literature and natural philosophy of the seventeenth century, in figures such as Boehme, Trapnel, Browne and Milton.
About the speakers
Sandrine Parageau and Kevin Killeen
Kevin Killeen, The Unknowable in Early Modern Thought: Natural Philosophy and the Poetics of the Ineffable (Stanford, 2023)
Sandrine Parageau, The Paradoxes of Ignorance in Early Modern England and France (Stanford, 2023)